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robin1(at)mrmoisture.com Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2010 7:22 pm Post subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork |
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Does anyone have a detailed description of the best way to properly tighten and test the nose wheel fork to minimize shimmy?
I have only read about it a dozen times and did some archive searches but when I tried the results were mediocre.
(Note: Matco Axel Installed)
Thanks in advance,
Robin
[quote][b]
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johngoodman
Joined: 18 Sep 2006 Posts: 530 Location: GA
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Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2010 7:29 pm Post subject: Re: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork |
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Robin,
The problem is the castle nut. It's either too tight, or too loose. I've been advised to get it as close to the 25 pounds as possible on the tight side- it will loosen up, I hope.
John
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Strasnuts
Joined: 10 Feb 2009 Posts: 502 Location: Salt Lake City, UT
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Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2010 7:30 pm Post subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork |
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I would speak up but you said "proper"
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 3, 2010, at 20:18, "Robin Marks" <robin1(at)mrmoisture.com (robin1(at)mrmoisture.com)> wrote:
[quote]
Does anyone have a detailed description of the best way to properly tighten and test the nose wheel fork to minimize shimmy?
I have only read about it a dozen times and did some archive searches but when I tried the results were mediocre.
(Note: Matco Axel Installed)
Thanks in advance,
Robin
[b]
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_________________ 40936
RV-10 SB N801VR Flying
780 Hours
SuperSTOL 60 hours |
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Tim Olson
Joined: 25 Jan 2007 Posts: 2872
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Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2010 7:44 pm Post subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork |
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I think with that Matco Axle installed it should be pretty
straightforward. For the nut that holds the forks on,
you torque it until it has over 22? lb-ft of breakout force
to get it to swivel....In practice I'd shoot for 25-35 and
be on the high side because it WILL loosen up over the first
couple hundred hours or 2 or 3 years.
Then for the axle, you'd tighten that matco axle into the
bearing about as tight as you can by hand, and then that sets
the preload. After that you could tighten the axle bolt nuts
to standard torque for that size nut if you wish, because
the matco axle is going to keep it from over tightening.
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD
do not archive
Robin Marks wrote:
Quote: | Does anyone have a detailed description of the best way to properly
tighten and test the nose wheel fork to minimize shimmy?
I have only read about it a dozen times and did some archive searches
but when I tried the results were mediocre.
(Note: Matco Axel Installed)
Thanks in advance,
Robin
*
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dlm46007(at)cox.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2010 8:20 pm Post subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork |
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Just be certain that the locking bolt that goes through the fork and spacer
and into the axle clears the wheel pant mounting bracket. I pointed the
potential problem to a buddy who was about to drill the locking hole where
the bracket must go.
--
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partner14
Joined: 12 Jan 2008 Posts: 540 Location: Granbury Texas
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Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2010 8:42 pm Post subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork |
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Robin, to properly do this you're probably going to need to drill and additional hole in the shaft for the cotter pin. With only one hole, to align the cotter pin, each alignment point is 60 degrees apart. Drill another hole, making sure it's in between the 2 opennings on the hex nut, which will give you the proper alignment every 30 drgrees. Then follow Tim's procedure.
See ya in a couple of months.
Don McDonald
--- On Wed, 2/3/10, Robin Marks <robin1(at)mrmoisture.com> wrote:
Quote: |
From: Robin Marks <robin1(at)mrmoisture.com>
Subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork
To: rv10-list(at)matronics.com
Date: Wednesday, February 3, 2010, 7:18 PM
Does anyone have a detailed description of the best way to properly tighten and test the nose wheel fork to minimize shimmy?
I have only read about it a dozen times and did some archive searches but when I tried the results were mediocre.
(Note: Matco Axel Installed)
Thanks in advance,
Robin
Quote: |
get=_blank rel=nofollow>http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?RV10-List
=nofollow>http://forums.matronics.com
blank rel=nofollow>http://www.matronics.com/contribution
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[quote][b]
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_________________ Don A. McDonald
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pitts_pilot(at)bellsouth. Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2010 9:38 pm Post subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork |
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I doubt that drilling a new hole would be very successful unless you had
someway to get the nose strut clamped on your drill press. Proper use
of the belleville washers will eliminate the shimmy .... the back and
forth motion of the nose fork. My experience comes from the Grumman
line which has a similar swiveling nose gear.
There are more than one way of stacking the washers that work. the
'best' stack seems to be two nested washers facing two nested washers
face to face (outside edges to outside edges). You can add motr
bellevelle washers or another flat washer or both .... this is the
experimental part.
Proper tension is 25-35 lbs pull on the wheel axle to make it move sideways.
There's a fine balance between being able to easily drag the plane
around the ramp (or push it back) by the prop and having shimmy problems.
This is all based on the nose fork bushing being vertical and the
rotation plane of the nose fork parallel to the ground.
Hope this helps. Someday I will have to address the same issue, I'm sure.
Linn
Don McDonald wrote:
Quote: | Robin, to properly do this you're probably going to need to drill and
additional hole in the shaft for the cotter pin. With only one hole, to
align the cotter pin, each alignment point is 60 degrees apart. Drill
another hole, making sure it's in between the 2 opennings on the hex
nut, which will give you the proper alignment every 30 drgrees. Then
follow Tim's procedure.
See ya in a couple of months.
Don McDonald
--- On *Wed, 2/3/10, Robin Marks /<robin1(at)mrmoisture.com>/* wrote:
From: Robin Marks <robin1(at)mrmoisture.com>
Subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork
To: rv10-list(at)matronics.com
Date: Wednesday, February 3, 2010, 7:18 PM
Does anyone have a detailed description of the best way to properly
tighten and test the nose wheel fork to minimize shimmy?
I have only read about it a dozen times and did some archive
searches but when I tried the results were mediocre.
(Note: Matco Axel Installed)
Thanks in advance,
Robin
*
get=_blank rel=nofollow>http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?RV10-List
=nofollow>http://forums.matronics.com
blank rel=nofollow>http://www.matronics.com/contribution
*
*
*
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rv10rob(at)gmail.com Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2010 9:42 pm Post subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork |
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D'oh! Wish I'd read this before I drilled my hole, 2 days ago. I just checked and will need to cut the bracket back a little, but shouldn't be a big deal.
For archive purposes, for those installing the Matco axle before the wheel pants, read ahead to Page 48-17 Step 2 to ensure the U-1013C bracket will clear the hole you drill.
-Rob
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 8:17 PM, DLM <dlm46007(at)cox.net (dlm46007(at)cox.net)> wrote:
[quote]--> RV10-List message posted by: "DLM" <dlm46007(at)cox.net (dlm46007(at)cox.net)>
Just be certain that the locking bolt that goes through the fork and spacer
and into the axle clears the wheel pant mounting bracket. I pointed the
potential problem to a buddy who was about to drill the locking hole where
the bracket must go.
--
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robin1(at)mrmoisture.com Guest
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Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2010 10:07 pm Post subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork |
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Thanks all. I think I have a little Goldilocks syndrome. First too
loose, then too tight that eventually became too lose. I never felt
comfortable with accurately measuring the break out force and the lack
to refining the nut cotter hole location just adds to the issue. The
only RV I have ever owned that didn't some form of shimmy was my -4. It
would be nice to have a consistent landings and decelerations with no
vibration.
BTW for those that have yet to land their -10 it's pure Vans. I
regularly touch N110EE down where the only sensation is the spinning of
the mains followed by a comfortable wheelie till all authority is lost.
I'm not that good, credit Vans design.
Robin
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Tim Olson
Joined: 25 Jan 2007 Posts: 2872
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Posted: Thu Feb 04, 2010 4:35 am Post subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork |
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It gets better after the first 2 or 3 re-torques over 200-300
hrs...it's a break-in process from the feel of it.
Definitely right on the landings....the plane makes you look good.
Tim
On Feb 4, 2010, at 12:06 AM, "Robin Marks" <robin1(at)mrmoisture.com>
wrote:
Quote: |
Thanks all. I think I have a little Goldilocks syndrome. First too
loose, then too tight that eventually became too lose. I never felt
comfortable with accurately measuring the break out force and the lack
to refining the nut cotter hole location just adds to the issue. The
only RV I have ever owned that didn't some form of shimmy was my -4.
It
would be nice to have a consistent landings and decelerations with no
vibration.
BTW for those that have yet to land their -10 it's pure Vans. I
regularly touch N110EE down where the only sensation is the spinning
of
the mains followed by a comfortable wheelie till all authority is
lost.
I'm not that good, credit Vans design.
Robin
|
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gengrumpy(at)aol.com Guest
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Posted: Thu Feb 04, 2010 7:54 am Post subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork |
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My problem with the Matco Axle is getting the Matco parts tight
enough. Their instructions say to tighten until the seal doesn't
rotate, which I haven't been able to do by hand, then back off just
enough to get the set screw in place.
Anyone got an idea on how to tighten these parts without using large
channel locks and scarring up the finish?
grumpy
On Feb 3, 2010, at 9:40 PM, Tim Olson wrote:
Quote: |
I think with that Matco Axle installed it should be pretty
straightforward. For the nut that holds the forks on,
you torque it until it has over 22? lb-ft of breakout force
to get it to swivel....In practice I'd shoot for 25-35 and
be on the high side because it WILL loosen up over the first
couple hundred hours or 2 or 3 years.
Then for the axle, you'd tighten that matco axle into the
bearing about as tight as you can by hand, and then that sets
the preload. After that you could tighten the axle bolt nuts
to standard torque for that size nut if you wish, because
the matco axle is going to keep it from over tightening.
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD
do not archive
Robin Marks wrote:
> Does anyone have a detailed description of the best way to properly
> tighten and test the nose wheel fork to minimize shimmy?
> I have only read about it a dozen times and did some archive
> searches but when I tried the results were mediocre.
> (Note: Matco Axel Installed)
> Thanks in advance,
> Robin
> *
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scottmschmidt(at)yahoo.co Guest
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Posted: Thu Feb 04, 2010 8:32 am Post subject: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork |
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Make sure you balance the front wheel. After I balanced mine, which took about 1.5 oz. of lead, I had no more shimmy in my front wheel.
Before I did the wheel balancing I tried to tighten and loosen the fork and it never made a difference.
Scott Schmidtscottmschmidt(at)yahoo.com
From: Miller John <gengrumpy(at)aol.com>
To: rv10-list(at)matronics.com
Sent: Thu, February 4, 2010 8:30:06 AM
Subject: Re: Proper Technique to Tighten Nose Wheel Fork
--> RV10-List message posted by: Miller John <gengrumpy(at)aol.com (gengrumpy(at)aol.com)>
My problem with the Matco Axle is getting the Matco parts tight enough. Their instructions say to tighten until the seal doesn't rotate, which I haven't been able to do by hand, then back off just enough to get the set screw in place.
Anyone got an idea on how to tighten these parts without using large channel locks and scarring up the finish?
grumpy
On Feb 3, 2010, at 9:40 PM, Tim Olson wrote:
[quote] --> RV10-List message posted by: Tim Olson <Tim(at)myrv10.com (Tim(at)myrv10.com)>
I think with that Matco Axle installed it should be pretty straightforward. For the nut that holds the forks on,
you torque it until it has over 22? lb-ft of breakout force
to get it to swivel....In practice I'd shoot for 25-35 and
be on the high side because it WILL loosen up over the first
couple hundred hours or 2 or 3 years.
Then for the axle, you'd tighten that matco axle into the
bearing about as tight as you can by hand, and then that sets
the preload. After that you could tighten the axle bolt nuts
to standard torque for that size nut if you wish, because
the matco axle is going to keep it from over tightening.
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD
do not archive
Robin Marks wrote:
> Does anyone have a detailed description of the best way to properly tighten and test the nose wheel fork to minimize shimmy?
> I have only read about it a dozen times and did some archive searches but when I tried the results were mediocre.
> (Note: Matco Axel Installed)
> Thanks in advance,
>
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